2/9/11

Slide Shows

Slide show for the folks at the Lakewood Link! Great job competing this year!
Venue in Eugene, OR at Backcountrygear.com
Flowers on my bike ride in Eugene.
Founder of Eugene, OR.
Skinner Rock in downtown Eugene.

I am really glad that you have visited my blog. Thanks and I hope to see and hear from you soon. Rob Pizem

2/4/11

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2/2/11

The Rifle Kneepad Ritual

A quick pictorial demonstration of what you have to do to climb here at Rifle.

2/1/11

Two weeks of fine weather....

As always in Fiordland, no matter how prepared you are, the weather has the final say about what you climb. This is what we have done in the last fine spell-

First we went into Sinbad Gully - and free climbed Shadowland!



A short Chopper flight took us up to the head of Sinbad Gully, into a
beautiful hanging valley surrounded by a cirque of 300m walls… some of
the cleanest, steepest walls any of had seen in this part of the
world! As the sound of the Helicopter subsided we realised what a
remote place we had been left in… we only saw one plane (from a
distance) in the 4 days we spent there.

That afternoon we headed straight over to the base of the cliff and
made short work of the first 2 pitches of Shadowland. At 19 and 20
they were a great warm-up for the rest of the route, even though they
were a little wet (from the water falls pounding off the top of the
cliff). We fixed a static rope to the ground, and headed back for
dinner.

The next morning we jugged up to the ledge, then Derek and I led the
next 2 pitches while Paul and Craig aid-climbed ahead and re-bolted
the fifth pitch. The 3rd pitch was a beautiful sustained grade 23
seam; then the 4th pitch continued up the same crack system, but
stepped it up a little to grade 26/27. Derek climbed the left variant
of the 5th pitch, which ended up being grade 25/26, and while Craig
headed up the Lightening Bolt crack, I figured out the right variant
of pitch 5. It was a little harder at grade 27 with some great moves
in a shallow corner with small finger locks. By this time it was
getting late, so we fixed the static and called it a day.

The 6th pitch… the "Lightening Bolt" crack is the most obvious feature
on the route, and ended up being a stunning pitch to climb. A corner
crack leading around the base of a square-cut roof and into another
sustained corner, which went at 22 and ended at a grassy ledge. From
there the 7th pitch headed up a just over-hung crack for 30m. This was
one of the most beautiful pitches, fairly sustained grade 26, climbing
the crack and small edges.

The next pitch was a short steep and rather powerful, grade 24
climbing. At the top of this we realised that it was getting on and we
only had two pitches to go, so Derek tackled the 9th "Bombay Chimney"
pitch, while I jugged past to try to finish the route. The Bombay
Chimney was a desperate 27, requiring some crazy knee bar action. I
headed up the last pitch, expecting to find some amazing water-worn
jugs, but instead it was a deceptively steep corner crack leading to a
few of the promised jugs in the last few meters of the route.
Unfortunately I fell off within meters of these jugs and was forced to
retreat to the ground, as it was getting dark.

The next morning Derek and I did the 250m jug, up to the base of
the10th pitch, and managed to finish the route with another sustained
grade 26 pitch.



Then with one rest day of rain we went to the Ngapunatoru Plato to attempt to climb on Kaipo Wall. This is New Zealand’s biggest wall (1300m) and is fearsome in size and location. The Team made camp right on the top of the wall



and then the first afternoon rapped down 200m and all climbed out again. Below us the wall drops away out of sight for 300m before if ledges out on to easier ground (800m of scrambling?). The next day the rigging team of Paul and Craig went down first and fixed another hundred meters of rope and Mayan and Myself rapped all the way down the head wall to the snow. The first three pitches are relatively easy (sub 20) climbing; then there is 200m of wall that overhangs 10-15m. The climbing was sometimes very marginally protected and was a lot harder than expected (24, 23, 24, 25). The last was climbed just as it was getting dark and afterwards we speed up fixed lines to the top.



After this we went straight back in to Sinbad Gully - after seeing the potential for amazing new routes we had to go back.
Kester Brown hopped in to take photos, film and belay. We met a climber Steve who was super keen to learn about the ways of the Darrans and the Force so suddenly Sinbad Gully did not seem like such and inhospitable place.

Hanging out in the Biv.

Paul, Craig and Steve cranked out 200m of a new route to the right of Shadowland and freed most of it at grade 21! (Incredible on such a steep wall). Mayan and I headed up the steepest, hardest bit of wall we could find with the aim of reaching a seam 150m up the wall. We got four pitch's up in two days and the next day free climbed them - the rest will have to wait until next year!

We where very lucky and had three alpine gecko sightings! They are very rare in NZ except on Sinbad wall it seems!

New Route in Kings Canyon National Park



piz : )

1/26/11

Kalymnos 2010 - Trip Report 12 (Ghost Kitchen)

Group discussion this morning was on the mental game. What are those self limiting beliefs that are floating around in your noggin which are stopping you progressing your climbing? How might they be serving you? How can you change them? Fear of falling may be in there, but often it's only a part. What about expectations? What about worrying what others think? So we discussed the importance of training mental toughness, why falls are a non-avoidable ingredient in climbing progression and some strategies we can use to reduce anxiety and truly enjoy the act of climbing on lead. This is the good stuff! Love it. [If this is stuff you're interested in, there's a couple of good books (like this and this) or you could join us sometime and get hands on.]

So, after me scrounging builders rubbish to build a bosun's chair (pic of field testing below), we jumped in the car and blitzed to Ghost Kitchen. GK offers some quality vert walls, gently overhung tufa madness, and the best warm down slabs on the island.


This would also be the crag we would test out our new CU belay glasses. Guaranteed to make you look like a Professor of Belaying (PBe) and a complete dork, these unusual prism-based glasses allow you to see directly upwards without tilting your head. This allows you to watch your climber while maintaining a relaxed stance. It's a tradeoff of fashion sense versus neck pain. Verdict: crystal clear and pretty awesome. Bloody expensive though (about $120 AUD). If you buy three it's free shipping and no tax which brings the price down some.


Dave and Ruth reaquainted themselves with Joy In The Garden 6a after Andy's onsight while Lena and Ronsley did Achilles 5c+. Warm ups over, I belted up the main wall and commenced hanging from my fencepost with the camera. Andy was up on the sweet Remember Wadi Rum 6c which just has the most crazy tufas and blobs.


It was a valiant onsight attempt, foiled with a slip of the foot on the finale, resulting on Andy wizzing down the tufa curtain. Second shot there were no such mistakes. Tick tick for Andy "I'm a delicate flower" Lightfoot! Dave got inspired by that effort, and girding himself in his Upskill kneepads, he proceeded to knee his way up the route. It was rediculous the amount of solid kneebars he found! He was however overcome by the unusual outtro sequence and took flight. By this time the sun was on the wall and a second try was off the cards.

Dave, Ruth and Lena enjoyed the nearby Delta 6a+, and my vantage point out in space on my fencepost afforded me some unexpectedly good angles and I snapped some great shots like this one of Lena. Perhaps my fave shot of this trip so far?


We then headed down to the "skateboard slab" which hosts some great very slabby, smooth and pocketed slabs. One day I'll bring a skateboard and see if it's possible to drop in and ride it out on abseil. I slammed the draws up on Persephone 6b in my sneakers (my new hobby; 7a is my best so far), and nearly everyone climbed it clean I think. Lena absolutely killed it on the slabs, with first try clean topropes of Parasitos 6a+ and Zyklop 6a+. Sam flashed Zyklop which was notable for it's un-Kalymnian-runout-ness.

And then came Serena. "6b? I'm calling bullshit on that!" Dave had been spat off the top section of this awkward number on the last camp. Rematch time. Using good tactics ("Nah mate, I won't ruin your onsight!"), he sent Andy up to put the draws on. With his reach like a sick dog, Andy grunted his way through the overhang and with difficulty, got himself into a position to clip the anchor. Draw on. Pull rope. Go for clip. Fumble. Draw swinging. Try again. Fumble. Swear. Draw swinging in a mocking, "you can't catch me" manner. More swearing. Final scathing stare at the anchor. Fall. Noooooooooo! It was in the bag!


Suitably padded up, Dave jumped on, cruised the slab and engaged the steepness, finding some no-hander kneebars. Up in the business, Andy passed on the crucial beta "Stick your arm up there like you're helping a cow give birth!" Dave had clipped the final bolt then started to gibber. ("I only had about five seconds left!"). He then somehow wrangled double kneebars which gave him enough juice to clip the tricksy anchor. Yeah boy! What will you be doing at 60? :)

Today's fun fact:
To the belayer of a top-roping climber, a red upturned helmet on the ground broadcasts thusly: Dave has initiated a game of pebble basketball. Would you like to play? You have selected...yes.

1/8/11

Kalymnos 2010 - Trip Report 4 (Grande Grotta)

It's THE most famous area on the island. A truly world class cave, possibly the most heavily stalactite-laden climbing cave in the world. You call it the Grande Grotta. We call it today's playground :) Seriously, the Grande Grotta is spectacular. You've never seen such rock architecture, absolute chock-covered with dripping stalactites. It's crazy. And the routes are crazy.

We had a sprinkle of rain in the morning. That was all it took to ensure we'd have a crowd up in the cave sector, where you can be guaranteed dry rock. Because of this, Owen wasn't taking any chances. No warm up, his rope was placed directly underneath Trella 7a, the mind boggling 40m pitch of uber proportions. (Trella translates to 'madness'). He laced himself to the nines with a veritable hula-skirt of quickdraws, and set to work. Like most of the insanely steep routes here, Trella does have rest positions, and the key to climbing it is to find the rests and use them well. Whether it's riding a stalactite, copping a kneebar, or bridging between your feet and back like a chimney. Owen used them all and came to within two metres of the top of the giant beast. It was then we saw him start to shake and the cry echoed out "You've got to be kidding me!". As if sensing his plight, everyone in the Grotta stopped, paused, and then erupted into encouragement in all languages. "Allez Allez!" "Venga!" "Come on!" With his last ounce of strength, he held it together, made the final move and clipped the anchor. Cheers!


Susy's fave pitch from the last camp was Trella and she'd pitched off the finale. So there's no doubt it was going down on this trip. Not today though! It's a tough unit and commands respect every time, as Glenn found out at about the 2/3 point on his flash attempt when he climbed high, yet could not get into a stable position to clip. The resulting fall was a biggie. Maybe 8-10m? Later in the day for some extra training, he toproped the line to clean the quickdraws only to fall on the final hold! Well, we know the route won't be getting underestimated at the next rematch (stay tuned).


The route DNA 7a+ is in the guts of the Grotta and is steeeeep. Perhaps 40 degrees overhung for its entire 20m length. Huge holds for sure, but you better be able to find those rests, otherwise your forearms may explode. We asked Matt if he'd try for the onsight. "Nah, I can't onsight it - I'll try for the flash." Huh? You haven't been here before!? "Well, I watched the video on YouTube." Ahh - climbing in the modern age! After he somehow talked Susy into putting the quickdraws up for him, he didn't disappoint, with a very smooth flash of the route, finding two upside down hands off double kneebars, amongst a multitude of other rests. So, a 'hardest flash' PB for the Slab King.


Speaking of kneebars, Sam managed to wrangle her first hands free kneebar on her ascent of Monahiki Elia 6a+. This pumpy steep route had been a nemesis for the Slab Queen on previous trips, so she did really well to fire it off first try. Sheree did likewise.

And me? Well I had a ripper day running around shooting video, taking photos, avoiding doing much belaying, and I even managed to do some climbing. In fact, one of my best onsighting days I've had. It was "Attack of the Long Routes". Packed away safe and sound were Aeolia Extension 40m 7a+, Tufantastic 40m 7b+, and Super Carpe Diem 40m 7c. The 7c (my best OS grade) was a funny one, as Sam had already walked down with most of the group and as I was getting ready to climb, I realised she had my climbing shoes. So the only option was to wear hers! Thank goodness 1) my wife and I have the same size climbing shoes, 2) it's a steep Kalymnos route and footwork is optional and 3) I'm comfortable wearing ladies shoes.

Oh, and on the walk-out, I touched a goat. I am now the goat whisperer.